SANTIAGO: Chile has recognised Palestine as an independent state, Foreign Minister Alfredo Moreno said Friday, following in the footsteps of several other Latin American countries.
“The government of Chile has adopted the resolution today recognising the existence of the state of Palestine as a free, independent and sovereign state,” he said, reading a foreign ministry declaration.
He added that Chilean President Sebastian Pinera would visit Israel and the Palestinian territories on March 4 and 5.
Late last year, Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador recognised Palestine as an independent state. Uruguay has said it will follow suit in 2011.
The Chilean statement did not mention the borders of the Palestinian state, which its South American neighbors said were “within the 1967 borders.” Those were the boundaries that existed before Israel captured the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip in that year’s Arab-Israeli conflict, known as the Six Day War.
Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Costa Rica had already previously recognised the Palestinian state.
The borders of a final Palestinian state have been one of the thorniest issues in peace negotiations with Israel.
Direct talks between the two sides, the first for nearly two years, began on September 2 but stalled after a 10-month Israeli settlement-building freeze expired three weeks later.
In a New Year’s Eve address, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas urged the international community to come up with a new peace plan after months of US shuttle diplomacy failed to secure a fresh settlement freeze.
The Palestinians’ current strategy centers on a proclamation of statehood in September 2011, the end of the 12 months set as a target for the talks launched in Washington.
But Israel is concerned over such plans and has reportedly ordered its own diplomats worldwide to mount a counter-offensive.
If the Palestinians lose this battle, they are considering calling for their territories to be placed under international administration. – AFP